Mark Carney, Bank Of Canada Governor, Issues Grim Forecast For Economy

Mark Carney

First Posted: 06/22/11 08:51 PM ET Updated: 08/22/11 06:12 AM ET

THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Strain from a world awash in debt is increasing the risk to what is already a fragile and weak economic recovery, the Bank of Canada warns.

And Canada faces a second, more immediate challenge from temporary factors such as disruptions from the Japanese earthquake and tsunami that will limit growth to about one per cent this quarter, governor Mark Carney added Wednesday.

"This is a disruptive time, there are a major series of changes going on ... so there will be some volatility," Carney told a Senate committee after his bank released its latest biennial Financial Systems Review.

The U.S. economy -- which most Canadian exporters depend on -- is a shadow of itself, he said, adding that U.S. households may need a decade to get out from debt.

Meanwhile, although emerging economies are booming, Canada's exporters, with the exception of commodities, are under-represented in that world.

And lastly, there's the mountain of debt weighing on the balance sheets of advanced countries, from Japan to parts of Europe to the U.S., that will dampen growth for years.

The summary put into stark language the findings of the central bank's financial systems review, released earlier in the morning, which took a more pessimistic view of the recovery.

The big problem facing the world is debt. Debt even threatens Canada's economy, given that household indebtedness is at record levels and could grow further before tailing off.

"The key risks to the stability of the Canadian financial system remain elevated and have edged higher since December," the bank concludes in the systems review.

For the first time, Carney revealed to a Senate committee that the current second quarter in Canada could see growth drop all the way to one per cent, from 3.9 per cent in the first three months.

Acknowledging that he had previously predicted growth of two per cent this quarter, which ends June 30, Carney told the senators: "The growth could be even lighter than that, it could be in the one per cent range."

He added, however, that he still expects the economy to do better in the second half of this year.

The bank report and Carney's testimony comes as Greece is again under the gun to hold off a credit default that would likely cripple some European banks and possibly touch off a new round of global financial jitters.

But the Bank of Canada says the debt woes extend further than Greece to other peripheral European nations -- Spain, Portugal and Ireland -- and over the longer term, to the U.S. and Japan.

Canada too faces a troubling household debt issue, the bank warns, which could be exacerbated by shocks, including an economic downturn and interest rate hikes.

In a separate report card, U.S. Federal Reserve officials also took a darker view of the situation, downgrading growth expectations both for the economy and job creation.

All these risks "are interconnected and mutually reinforcing," the Bank of Canada said.

Carney urged Canadians to keep things in perspective, however, growth is "reclining, not declining," and Canada still benefits from sound fundamentals.

Canada's financial system got a "healthy" grade both in terms of the soundness of the banking system and business balance sheets, but it is vulnerable somewhat to outside forces.

Carney said Canada's exposure to Europe's sovereign debt is small, but not insignificant, given the interconnectiveness of the international banking system.

"The Canadian financial system is not immune to the tensions that are currently affecting European markets," the bank's policy council says in the report.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has also expressed concern about the Greek crisis, urging European policy-makers to "create a firewall that would ensure that this type of issue would not spread beyond Greece."

Despite the weak recovery and the pain it will cause, governments have no choice but to start the process of getting their fiscal houses in order, said Carney.

He cautioned that indebted countries, even the U.S., shouldn't assume bond markets will be always be prepared to fill their credit needs at reasonable rates. Canada learned that lesson the hard way in the 1990s, he pointed out.

"Our experience in the mid-1990s is that the bond market is there and then it's not," he said.

Domestically, the bank is still very worried about Canadian household debt, which is at an all-time high of 147 per cent of disposable income.

The risk, it says, is that as household finances get squeezed, Canadians will have less money to spend on consumer goods, which would slow down economic growth.

"Further moderation in the pace of debt accumulation by households is needed to contain the buildup of this vulnerability," it says.

The bank also cites global imbalances, the two-speed recovery where advanced nations grow far slower than emerging economies, as additional risks that appear no closer to resolution.

"If the significant fragilities that still burden the financial system are not addressed in a timely manner, the progress achieved to date could be derailed," the bank said.

TD Bank economist Diana Petramala said the report suggests the Bank of Canada is very much in worry mode, and is unlikely to raise interest rates -- which could weaken the economy -- until 2012.

"All of these risks (cited by the central bank) could have significant economic consequences on Canada's economy and financial system," if they are borne out, Petramala said.

"In addition, they are medium-term (rather than short-term) in nature, suggesting they are unlikely to disappear any time soon. Under our current forecast, we don't anticipate Canada's overnight rate to reach a more normal level of three per cent until 2013."
The bank last hiked interest rates last September, lifting its policy setting to one per cent, still exceptionally low by historical standards.

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THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Strain from a world awash in debt is increasing the risk to what is already a fragile and weak economic recovery, the Bank of Canada warns. And Canada faces a second,...
THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Strain from a world awash in debt is increasing the risk to what is already a fragile and weak economic recovery, the Bank of Canada warns. And Canada faces a second,...
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07:22 PM on 06/24/2011
peak debt, oil, water, food, what's left & how long do we have to wait for the end?
01:15 AM on 06/24/2011
High private debts equals the miracle of compound interest...
01:14 AM on 06/24/2011
This high debt proves the failure of neoliberalism. They should take their cue from the Bible and reduce the debts.
07:23 PM on 06/24/2011
The bible frowns on debt & debtors...
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haselcheck
Had enuff...Get active....
10:50 AM on 06/23/2011
Why not raise interest rates ? Why are you penalizing savers and rewarding wanton spending ? Low interest rates encourage deficit spending ......Keynes is dead...
09:30 PM on 06/23/2011
Fanned! I was just going to say that...
01:14 AM on 06/24/2011
That would be twisting the knife. The reason private debt is so high is because this is the only way to maintain private demand. Higher interest rates would fuel inflation and cause the economy to shrink.
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sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
08:21 PM on 06/22/2011
Don't worry with Conservatives in power we can count on increases in corporate welfare , the growth of the MIC and an increase in government debt.

While they talk the talk of fiscal responsibility they do just the opposite. It is all paid for on the backs of the working class, the elderly, the young and the disabled. The wealthiest among us, need to be supported by government largeness, they work so hard.

Cons do only two things well; mislead and bleed nations. Don't worry though, the top 3% will do very well. The rest will be "trickeled on"...................The second act of the Great North American Decline, will be set in Canada.

Don't believe me....................Watch and learn..........Programs and popcorn heeere!.......
.........SOF.
08:57 PM on 06/22/2011
I'm afraid your right. I see what s going on in the States. the conservatives are out to bring down the Country. They have run up the debt under bush and the Big Banks crashed the eccnomony and got bailed out. The working class didn't get bailed out. Then there is the Oil Industry. They pay no taxes and get a pay off from the Government to the tune of 4 Billion a year. They are doing their best to end Social Security and Medicare. If the Dems don't give in they promise to send the Government down the tubes. With our weak livered Dems I would not be surprised if we wind up like Mexcio in the very near future. Don't let them do it to Canada.
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sonoffestus
Got smart & got out!
09:15 PM on 06/22/2011
Yes, I know too well.............I sold the house and everything and left the States in 2005..............Sat. June 25th I will become one of Canada's newest citizens. I can not wait!

Canadians are naive when it come to their Conservatives. They say and think; "they are like American Democrats", however their policies and ideology are the same and the results will be the same. Canadians are in for a very rude awakening.